North Carolina court hears challenge to Duke Energy’s reduced credits for rooftop solar

Energy News Beat

​[[{“value”:”

The debate over rooftop solar in North Carolina entered the courtroom on Wednesday, when a three-judge Court of Appeals panel heard a challenge to Duke Energy’s reduced payments for home solar arrays.

“We are here this morning because a terrible injury has been inflicted on the rooftop solar industry in our state,” said Matthew Quinn, the lawyer for seven climate justice groups appealing the rates approved last year by the Utilities Commission.

The lowered credits are part of a complicated truce between Duke, some of the state’s oldest rooftop installers, and multiple clean energy groups, all of whom sought to avoid the bruising battles over net metering seen in other states.

But the new payments have undoubtedly tamped interest in homes going solar since they took effect last fall, with one installer reporting residential sales falling by as much as 50%. 

Since the entities who compromised with Duke don’t represent all of those who engaged in the commission’s net metering docket, their agreement should be given “little to no weight,” the challengers, including NC WARN and Environmental Working Group, say in their legal appeal.

What’s more, they argue, the new rates are illegal because they were promulgated after internal Duke studies and stakeholder discussions regarding rooftop solar — not the independent investigation they believe is required by law.

“A 2017 state law mandates the Utilities Commission conduct its own solar net metering cost-benefit analysis,” said Jim Warren, the executive director of NC WARN, in a note to reporters before the oral arguments. “The commission flouted the law, choosing instead to lean on Duke Energy’s deeply flawed and one-sided calculations.”

The reasoning rests in part on an Energy News Network article that quotes one of the 2017 law’s authors, John Szoka, a Fayetteville Republican who served in the state House of Representatives for a decade. The story describes Szoka as “adamant” that the commission should conduct the study. 

“It’s not up to the utility to determine whether net metering is good or bad,” Szoka told the Energy News Network at the time. “We know what that answer will be. We’re not putting the fox in charge of the hen house here. That is not the intent.”

After quoting the piece in their brief, the plaintiffs write: “Clearly, the General Assembly did not intend for [Duke] to satisfy [the law] by performing an internal study. Indeed, such a study would be akin to ‘the fox in charge of the hen house.’”

Duke and other defenders of the new credits say Szoka’s comments don’t override the “plain meaning” of the language in the law, which says simply that the rates, “shall be nondiscriminatory and established only after an investigation of the costs and benefits of customer-sited generation.” 

“Legislative intent,” lawyers for Duke note dryly in one footnote in a legal filing, “is not derived from news articles from Energy News Network.”

The appellants also claim the commission erred by failing to consider all of the benefits of rooftop solar and by forcing solar owners to migrate to time-variable rates instead of allowing flat rates to stand.

The solution, they say in their brief: “The Court of Appeals should reverse the Commission’s… Order and remand this matter for a Commission-led investigation of the costs and benefits for [net metered] solar.”

A dogged Duke foe, NC WARN and its partners aren’t just trying to prevail on an obscure technical point of process. Examinations of distributed solar in other states have shown a clear trend: when utilities conduct the analyses, the benefits of rooftop solar come in lower than when commissions or independent groups are in charge.

Indeed, both Duke and Public Staff, the state-sanctioned customer advocate which sided against the appeal, maintained in court Wednesday that rooftop solar unfairly burdens non-solar customers and the company itself, a point few clean energy advocates or solar industry representatives concede.

Duke also isn’t alone among investor-owned utilities in its years-long quest to lower the one-to-one net metering credit rooftop solar owners have long enjoyed. After all, the fewer electrons the company sells at a markup, the lower its profits.

But Duke has also found compromise with at least some of its critics in ways many of its peers have not, helping to explain why it was groups like NC WARN —  and not the rooftop industry itself — that appeared formally in court on Wednesday.

The crux of the grand bargain is a move toward “time of use” rates, in which diligent solar owners can conceivably squeeze out the same benefits they enjoyed under the old rates, so long as they time their energy use to account for peak demand hours. 

A “bridge rate,” negotiated by long-time installers Southern Energy Management, Sundance Power Systems, and Yes Solar will be available for new customers until 2027, and many in the industry say it’s preferred for its simplicity and its relative low risk.

A final piece of the deal was greenlit last month: financial incentives for home batteries paired with rooftop solar, part of a pilot program to be rolled out in May called PowerPair.

While many veteran installers acknowledged fewer customer inquiries last year after the new rates took effect, they also suggested the harder-to-negotiate terms could weed out “bad actors” in the industry

And all say they’re focused long term on maximizing their key business advantage: Fossil fuels are becoming more expensive, while the materials designed to harness and store forever-free sunlight are getting cheaper.

Still, Bryce Bruncati, director of residential sales at 8M Solar and one of the industry’s most outspoken critics of the time-of-use rates, hopes the lawsuit argued today will lay the groundwork for a better long-term solution for installers.

“We’ve got these interim patches,” he told Energy News Network, referring to the bridge rate and the Power Pair program. “But starting in 2027, we’re going to see this massive contraction of the solar industry —  and fewer people going solar in general — if we don’t do something.”

There’s no firm deadline for the judges who heard Wednesday’s argument to issue a decision, but many observers were expecting an outcome within 90 days.

“}]] 

The post North Carolina court hears challenge to Duke Energy’s reduced credits for rooftop solar appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

North Carolina court hears challenge to Duke Energy’s reduced credits for rooftop solar

Energy News Beat

​[[{“value”:”

The debate over rooftop solar in North Carolina entered the courtroom on Wednesday, when a three-judge Court of Appeals panel heard a challenge to Duke Energy’s reduced payments for home solar arrays.

“We are here this morning because a terrible injury has been inflicted on the rooftop solar industry in our state,” said Matthew Quinn, the lawyer for seven climate justice groups appealing the rates approved last year by the Utilities Commission.

The lowered credits are part of a complicated truce between Duke, some of the state’s oldest rooftop installers, and multiple clean energy groups, all of whom sought to avoid the bruising battles over net metering seen in other states.

But the new payments have undoubtedly tamped interest in homes going solar since they took effect last fall, with one installer reporting residential sales falling by as much as 50%. 

Since the entities who compromised with Duke don’t represent all of those who engaged in the commission’s net metering docket, their agreement should be given “little to no weight,” the challengers, including NC WARN and Environmental Working Group, say in their legal appeal.

What’s more, they argue, the new rates are illegal because they were promulgated after internal Duke studies and stakeholder discussions regarding rooftop solar — not the independent investigation they believe is required by law.

“A 2017 state law mandates the Utilities Commission conduct its own solar net metering cost-benefit analysis,” said Jim Warren, the executive director of NC WARN, in a note to reporters before the oral arguments. “The commission flouted the law, choosing instead to lean on Duke Energy’s deeply flawed and one-sided calculations.”

The reasoning rests in part on an Energy News Network article that quotes one of the 2017 law’s authors, John Szoka, a Fayetteville Republican who served in the state House of Representatives for a decade. The story describes Szoka as “adamant” that the commission should conduct the study. 

“It’s not up to the utility to determine whether net metering is good or bad,” Szoka told the Energy News Network at the time. “We know what that answer will be. We’re not putting the fox in charge of the hen house here. That is not the intent.”

After quoting the piece in their brief, the plaintiffs write: “Clearly, the General Assembly did not intend for [Duke] to satisfy [the law] by performing an internal study. Indeed, such a study would be akin to ‘the fox in charge of the hen house.’”

Duke and other defenders of the new credits say Szoka’s comments don’t override the “plain meaning” of the language in the law, which says simply that the rates, “shall be nondiscriminatory and established only after an investigation of the costs and benefits of customer-sited generation.” 

“Legislative intent,” lawyers for Duke note dryly in one footnote in a legal filing, “is not derived from news articles from Energy News Network.”

The appellants also claim the commission erred by failing to consider all of the benefits of rooftop solar and by forcing solar owners to migrate to time-variable rates instead of allowing flat rates to stand.

The solution, they say in their brief: “The Court of Appeals should reverse the Commission’s… Order and remand this matter for a Commission-led investigation of the costs and benefits for [net metered] solar.”

A dogged Duke foe, NC WARN and its partners aren’t just trying to prevail on an obscure technical point of process. Examinations of distributed solar in other states have shown a clear trend: when utilities conduct the analyses, the benefits of rooftop solar come in lower than when commissions or independent groups are in charge.

Indeed, both Duke and Public Staff, the state-sanctioned customer advocate which sided against the appeal, maintained in court Wednesday that rooftop solar unfairly burdens non-solar customers and the company itself, a point few clean energy advocates or solar industry representatives concede.

Duke also isn’t alone among investor-owned utilities in its years-long quest to lower the one-to-one net metering credit rooftop solar owners have long enjoyed. After all, the fewer electrons the company sells at a markup, the lower its profits.

But Duke has also found compromise with at least some of its critics in ways many of its peers have not, helping to explain why it was groups like NC WARN —  and not the rooftop industry itself — that appeared formally in court on Wednesday.

The crux of the grand bargain is a move toward “time of use” rates, in which diligent solar owners can conceivably squeeze out the same benefits they enjoyed under the old rates, so long as they time their energy use to account for peak demand hours. 

A “bridge rate,” negotiated by long-time installers Southern Energy Management, Sundance Power Systems, and Yes Solar will be available for new customers until 2027, and many in the industry say it’s preferred for its simplicity and its relative low risk.

A final piece of the deal was greenlit last month: financial incentives for home batteries paired with rooftop solar, part of a pilot program to be rolled out in May called PowerPair.

While many veteran installers acknowledged fewer customer inquiries last year after the new rates took effect, they also suggested the harder-to-negotiate terms could weed out “bad actors” in the industry

And all say they’re focused long term on maximizing their key business advantage: Fossil fuels are becoming more expensive, while the materials designed to harness and store forever-free sunlight are getting cheaper.

Still, Bryce Bruncati, director of residential sales at 8M Solar and one of the industry’s most outspoken critics of the time-of-use rates, hopes the lawsuit argued today will lay the groundwork for a better long-term solution for installers.

“We’ve got these interim patches,” he told Energy News Network, referring to the bridge rate and the Power Pair program. “But starting in 2027, we’re going to see this massive contraction of the solar industry —  and fewer people going solar in general — if we don’t do something.”

There’s no firm deadline for the judges who heard Wednesday’s argument to issue a decision, but many observers were expecting an outcome within 90 days.

“}]] 

The post North Carolina court hears challenge to Duke Energy’s reduced credits for rooftop solar appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

North Carolina court hears challenge to Duke Energy’s reduced credits for rooftop solar

Energy News Beat

​[[{“value”:”

The debate over rooftop solar in North Carolina entered the courtroom on Wednesday, when a three-judge Court of Appeals panel heard a challenge to Duke Energy’s reduced payments for home solar arrays.

“We are here this morning because a terrible injury has been inflicted on the rooftop solar industry in our state,” said Matthew Quinn, the lawyer for seven climate justice groups appealing the rates approved last year by the Utilities Commission.

The lowered credits are part of a complicated truce between Duke, some of the state’s oldest rooftop installers, and multiple clean energy groups, all of whom sought to avoid the bruising battles over net metering seen in other states.

But the new payments have undoubtedly tamped interest in homes going solar since they took effect last fall, with one installer reporting residential sales falling by as much as 50%. 

Since the entities who compromised with Duke don’t represent all of those who engaged in the commission’s net metering docket, their agreement should be given “little to no weight,” the challengers, including NC WARN and Environmental Working Group, say in their legal appeal.

What’s more, they argue, the new rates are illegal because they were promulgated after internal Duke studies and stakeholder discussions regarding rooftop solar — not the independent investigation they believe is required by law.

“A 2017 state law mandates the Utilities Commission conduct its own solar net metering cost-benefit analysis,” said Jim Warren, the executive director of NC WARN, in a note to reporters before the oral arguments. “The commission flouted the law, choosing instead to lean on Duke Energy’s deeply flawed and one-sided calculations.”

The reasoning rests in part on an Energy News Network article that quotes one of the 2017 law’s authors, John Szoka, a Fayetteville Republican who served in the state House of Representatives for a decade. The story describes Szoka as “adamant” that the commission should conduct the study. 

“It’s not up to the utility to determine whether net metering is good or bad,” Szoka told the Energy News Network at the time. “We know what that answer will be. We’re not putting the fox in charge of the hen house here. That is not the intent.”

After quoting the piece in their brief, the plaintiffs write: “Clearly, the General Assembly did not intend for [Duke] to satisfy [the law] by performing an internal study. Indeed, such a study would be akin to ‘the fox in charge of the hen house.’”

Duke and other defenders of the new credits say Szoka’s comments don’t override the “plain meaning” of the language in the law, which says simply that the rates, “shall be nondiscriminatory and established only after an investigation of the costs and benefits of customer-sited generation.” 

“Legislative intent,” lawyers for Duke note dryly in one footnote in a legal filing, “is not derived from news articles from Energy News Network.”

The appellants also claim the commission erred by failing to consider all of the benefits of rooftop solar and by forcing solar owners to migrate to time-variable rates instead of allowing flat rates to stand.

The solution, they say in their brief: “The Court of Appeals should reverse the Commission’s… Order and remand this matter for a Commission-led investigation of the costs and benefits for [net metered] solar.”

A dogged Duke foe, NC WARN and its partners aren’t just trying to prevail on an obscure technical point of process. Examinations of distributed solar in other states have shown a clear trend: when utilities conduct the analyses, the benefits of rooftop solar come in lower than when commissions or independent groups are in charge.

Indeed, both Duke and Public Staff, the state-sanctioned customer advocate which sided against the appeal, maintained in court Wednesday that rooftop solar unfairly burdens non-solar customers and the company itself, a point few clean energy advocates or solar industry representatives concede.

Duke also isn’t alone among investor-owned utilities in its years-long quest to lower the one-to-one net metering credit rooftop solar owners have long enjoyed. After all, the fewer electrons the company sells at a markup, the lower its profits.

But Duke has also found compromise with at least some of its critics in ways many of its peers have not, helping to explain why it was groups like NC WARN —  and not the rooftop industry itself — that appeared formally in court on Wednesday.

The crux of the grand bargain is a move toward “time of use” rates, in which diligent solar owners can conceivably squeeze out the same benefits they enjoyed under the old rates, so long as they time their energy use to account for peak demand hours. 

A “bridge rate,” negotiated by long-time installers Southern Energy Management, Sundance Power Systems, and Yes Solar will be available for new customers until 2027, and many in the industry say it’s preferred for its simplicity and its relative low risk.

A final piece of the deal was greenlit last month: financial incentives for home batteries paired with rooftop solar, part of a pilot program to be rolled out in May called PowerPair.

While many veteran installers acknowledged fewer customer inquiries last year after the new rates took effect, they also suggested the harder-to-negotiate terms could weed out “bad actors” in the industry

And all say they’re focused long term on maximizing their key business advantage: Fossil fuels are becoming more expensive, while the materials designed to harness and store forever-free sunlight are getting cheaper.

Still, Bryce Bruncati, director of residential sales at 8M Solar and one of the industry’s most outspoken critics of the time-of-use rates, hopes the lawsuit argued today will lay the groundwork for a better long-term solution for installers.

“We’ve got these interim patches,” he told Energy News Network, referring to the bridge rate and the Power Pair program. “But starting in 2027, we’re going to see this massive contraction of the solar industry —  and fewer people going solar in general — if we don’t do something.”

There’s no firm deadline for the judges who heard Wednesday’s argument to issue a decision, but many observers were expecting an outcome within 90 days.

“}]] 

The post North Carolina court hears challenge to Duke Energy’s reduced credits for rooftop solar appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

North Carolina court hears challenge to Duke Energy’s reduced credits for rooftop solar

Energy News Beat

​[[{“value”:”

The debate over rooftop solar in North Carolina entered the courtroom on Wednesday, when a three-judge Court of Appeals panel heard a challenge to Duke Energy’s reduced payments for home solar arrays.

“We are here this morning because a terrible injury has been inflicted on the rooftop solar industry in our state,” said Matthew Quinn, the lawyer for seven climate justice groups appealing the rates approved last year by the Utilities Commission.

The lowered credits are part of a complicated truce between Duke, some of the state’s oldest rooftop installers, and multiple clean energy groups, all of whom sought to avoid the bruising battles over net metering seen in other states.

But the new payments have undoubtedly tamped interest in homes going solar since they took effect last fall, with one installer reporting residential sales falling by as much as 50%. 

Since the entities who compromised with Duke don’t represent all of those who engaged in the commission’s net metering docket, their agreement should be given “little to no weight,” the challengers, including NC WARN and Environmental Working Group, say in their legal appeal.

What’s more, they argue, the new rates are illegal because they were promulgated after internal Duke studies and stakeholder discussions regarding rooftop solar — not the independent investigation they believe is required by law.

“A 2017 state law mandates the Utilities Commission conduct its own solar net metering cost-benefit analysis,” said Jim Warren, the executive director of NC WARN, in a note to reporters before the oral arguments. “The commission flouted the law, choosing instead to lean on Duke Energy’s deeply flawed and one-sided calculations.”

The reasoning rests in part on an Energy News Network article that quotes one of the 2017 law’s authors, John Szoka, a Fayetteville Republican who served in the state House of Representatives for a decade. The story describes Szoka as “adamant” that the commission should conduct the study. 

“It’s not up to the utility to determine whether net metering is good or bad,” Szoka told the Energy News Network at the time. “We know what that answer will be. We’re not putting the fox in charge of the hen house here. That is not the intent.”

After quoting the piece in their brief, the plaintiffs write: “Clearly, the General Assembly did not intend for [Duke] to satisfy [the law] by performing an internal study. Indeed, such a study would be akin to ‘the fox in charge of the hen house.’”

Duke and other defenders of the new credits say Szoka’s comments don’t override the “plain meaning” of the language in the law, which says simply that the rates, “shall be nondiscriminatory and established only after an investigation of the costs and benefits of customer-sited generation.” 

“Legislative intent,” lawyers for Duke note dryly in one footnote in a legal filing, “is not derived from news articles from Energy News Network.”

The appellants also claim the commission erred by failing to consider all of the benefits of rooftop solar and by forcing solar owners to migrate to time-variable rates instead of allowing flat rates to stand.

The solution, they say in their brief: “The Court of Appeals should reverse the Commission’s… Order and remand this matter for a Commission-led investigation of the costs and benefits for [net metered] solar.”

A dogged Duke foe, NC WARN and its partners aren’t just trying to prevail on an obscure technical point of process. Examinations of distributed solar in other states have shown a clear trend: when utilities conduct the analyses, the benefits of rooftop solar come in lower than when commissions or independent groups are in charge.

Indeed, both Duke and Public Staff, the state-sanctioned customer advocate which sided against the appeal, maintained in court Wednesday that rooftop solar unfairly burdens non-solar customers and the company itself, a point few clean energy advocates or solar industry representatives concede.

Duke also isn’t alone among investor-owned utilities in its years-long quest to lower the one-to-one net metering credit rooftop solar owners have long enjoyed. After all, the fewer electrons the company sells at a markup, the lower its profits.

But Duke has also found compromise with at least some of its critics in ways many of its peers have not, helping to explain why it was groups like NC WARN —  and not the rooftop industry itself — that appeared formally in court on Wednesday.

The crux of the grand bargain is a move toward “time of use” rates, in which diligent solar owners can conceivably squeeze out the same benefits they enjoyed under the old rates, so long as they time their energy use to account for peak demand hours. 

A “bridge rate,” negotiated by long-time installers Southern Energy Management, Sundance Power Systems, and Yes Solar will be available for new customers until 2027, and many in the industry say it’s preferred for its simplicity and its relative low risk.

A final piece of the deal was greenlit last month: financial incentives for home batteries paired with rooftop solar, part of a pilot program to be rolled out in May called PowerPair.

While many veteran installers acknowledged fewer customer inquiries last year after the new rates took effect, they also suggested the harder-to-negotiate terms could weed out “bad actors” in the industry

And all say they’re focused long term on maximizing their key business advantage: Fossil fuels are becoming more expensive, while the materials designed to harness and store forever-free sunlight are getting cheaper.

Still, Bryce Bruncati, director of residential sales at 8M Solar and one of the industry’s most outspoken critics of the time-of-use rates, hopes the lawsuit argued today will lay the groundwork for a better long-term solution for installers.

“We’ve got these interim patches,” he told Energy News Network, referring to the bridge rate and the Power Pair program. “But starting in 2027, we’re going to see this massive contraction of the solar industry —  and fewer people going solar in general — if we don’t do something.”

There’s no firm deadline for the judges who heard Wednesday’s argument to issue a decision, but many observers were expecting an outcome within 90 days.

“}]] 

The post North Carolina court hears challenge to Duke Energy’s reduced credits for rooftop solar appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

North Carolina court hears challenge to Duke Energy’s reduced credits for rooftop solar

Energy News Beat

​[[{“value”:”

The debate over rooftop solar in North Carolina entered the courtroom on Wednesday, when a three-judge Court of Appeals panel heard a challenge to Duke Energy’s reduced payments for home solar arrays.

“We are here this morning because a terrible injury has been inflicted on the rooftop solar industry in our state,” said Matthew Quinn, the lawyer for seven climate justice groups appealing the rates approved last year by the Utilities Commission.

The lowered credits are part of a complicated truce between Duke, some of the state’s oldest rooftop installers, and multiple clean energy groups, all of whom sought to avoid the bruising battles over net metering seen in other states.

But the new payments have undoubtedly tamped interest in homes going solar since they took effect last fall, with one installer reporting residential sales falling by as much as 50%. 

Since the entities who compromised with Duke don’t represent all of those who engaged in the commission’s net metering docket, their agreement should be given “little to no weight,” the challengers, including NC WARN and Environmental Working Group, say in their legal appeal.

What’s more, they argue, the new rates are illegal because they were promulgated after internal Duke studies and stakeholder discussions regarding rooftop solar — not the independent investigation they believe is required by law.

“A 2017 state law mandates the Utilities Commission conduct its own solar net metering cost-benefit analysis,” said Jim Warren, the executive director of NC WARN, in a note to reporters before the oral arguments. “The commission flouted the law, choosing instead to lean on Duke Energy’s deeply flawed and one-sided calculations.”

The reasoning rests in part on an Energy News Network article that quotes one of the 2017 law’s authors, John Szoka, a Fayetteville Republican who served in the state House of Representatives for a decade. The story describes Szoka as “adamant” that the commission should conduct the study. 

“It’s not up to the utility to determine whether net metering is good or bad,” Szoka told the Energy News Network at the time. “We know what that answer will be. We’re not putting the fox in charge of the hen house here. That is not the intent.”

After quoting the piece in their brief, the plaintiffs write: “Clearly, the General Assembly did not intend for [Duke] to satisfy [the law] by performing an internal study. Indeed, such a study would be akin to ‘the fox in charge of the hen house.’”

Duke and other defenders of the new credits say Szoka’s comments don’t override the “plain meaning” of the language in the law, which says simply that the rates, “shall be nondiscriminatory and established only after an investigation of the costs and benefits of customer-sited generation.” 

“Legislative intent,” lawyers for Duke note dryly in one footnote in a legal filing, “is not derived from news articles from Energy News Network.”

The appellants also claim the commission erred by failing to consider all of the benefits of rooftop solar and by forcing solar owners to migrate to time-variable rates instead of allowing flat rates to stand.

The solution, they say in their brief: “The Court of Appeals should reverse the Commission’s… Order and remand this matter for a Commission-led investigation of the costs and benefits for [net metered] solar.”

A dogged Duke foe, NC WARN and its partners aren’t just trying to prevail on an obscure technical point of process. Examinations of distributed solar in other states have shown a clear trend: when utilities conduct the analyses, the benefits of rooftop solar come in lower than when commissions or independent groups are in charge.

Indeed, both Duke and Public Staff, the state-sanctioned customer advocate which sided against the appeal, maintained in court Wednesday that rooftop solar unfairly burdens non-solar customers and the company itself, a point few clean energy advocates or solar industry representatives concede.

Duke also isn’t alone among investor-owned utilities in its years-long quest to lower the one-to-one net metering credit rooftop solar owners have long enjoyed. After all, the fewer electrons the company sells at a markup, the lower its profits.

But Duke has also found compromise with at least some of its critics in ways many of its peers have not, helping to explain why it was groups like NC WARN —  and not the rooftop industry itself — that appeared formally in court on Wednesday.

The crux of the grand bargain is a move toward “time of use” rates, in which diligent solar owners can conceivably squeeze out the same benefits they enjoyed under the old rates, so long as they time their energy use to account for peak demand hours. 

A “bridge rate,” negotiated by long-time installers Southern Energy Management, Sundance Power Systems, and Yes Solar will be available for new customers until 2027, and many in the industry say it’s preferred for its simplicity and its relative low risk.

A final piece of the deal was greenlit last month: financial incentives for home batteries paired with rooftop solar, part of a pilot program to be rolled out in May called PowerPair.

While many veteran installers acknowledged fewer customer inquiries last year after the new rates took effect, they also suggested the harder-to-negotiate terms could weed out “bad actors” in the industry

And all say they’re focused long term on maximizing their key business advantage: Fossil fuels are becoming more expensive, while the materials designed to harness and store forever-free sunlight are getting cheaper.

Still, Bryce Bruncati, director of residential sales at 8M Solar and one of the industry’s most outspoken critics of the time-of-use rates, hopes the lawsuit argued today will lay the groundwork for a better long-term solution for installers.

“We’ve got these interim patches,” he told Energy News Network, referring to the bridge rate and the Power Pair program. “But starting in 2027, we’re going to see this massive contraction of the solar industry —  and fewer people going solar in general — if we don’t do something.”

There’s no firm deadline for the judges who heard Wednesday’s argument to issue a decision, but many observers were expecting an outcome within 90 days.

“}]] 

The post North Carolina court hears challenge to Duke Energy’s reduced credits for rooftop solar appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

North Carolina court hears challenge to Duke Energy’s reduced credits for rooftop solar

Energy News Beat

​[[{“value”:”

The debate over rooftop solar in North Carolina entered the courtroom on Wednesday, when a three-judge Court of Appeals panel heard a challenge to Duke Energy’s reduced payments for home solar arrays.

“We are here this morning because a terrible injury has been inflicted on the rooftop solar industry in our state,” said Matthew Quinn, the lawyer for seven climate justice groups appealing the rates approved last year by the Utilities Commission.

The lowered credits are part of a complicated truce between Duke, some of the state’s oldest rooftop installers, and multiple clean energy groups, all of whom sought to avoid the bruising battles over net metering seen in other states.

But the new payments have undoubtedly tamped interest in homes going solar since they took effect last fall, with one installer reporting residential sales falling by as much as 50%. 

Since the entities who compromised with Duke don’t represent all of those who engaged in the commission’s net metering docket, their agreement should be given “little to no weight,” the challengers, including NC WARN and Environmental Working Group, say in their legal appeal.

What’s more, they argue, the new rates are illegal because they were promulgated after internal Duke studies and stakeholder discussions regarding rooftop solar — not the independent investigation they believe is required by law.

“A 2017 state law mandates the Utilities Commission conduct its own solar net metering cost-benefit analysis,” said Jim Warren, the executive director of NC WARN, in a note to reporters before the oral arguments. “The commission flouted the law, choosing instead to lean on Duke Energy’s deeply flawed and one-sided calculations.”

The reasoning rests in part on an Energy News Network article that quotes one of the 2017 law’s authors, John Szoka, a Fayetteville Republican who served in the state House of Representatives for a decade. The story describes Szoka as “adamant” that the commission should conduct the study. 

“It’s not up to the utility to determine whether net metering is good or bad,” Szoka told the Energy News Network at the time. “We know what that answer will be. We’re not putting the fox in charge of the hen house here. That is not the intent.”

After quoting the piece in their brief, the plaintiffs write: “Clearly, the General Assembly did not intend for [Duke] to satisfy [the law] by performing an internal study. Indeed, such a study would be akin to ‘the fox in charge of the hen house.’”

Duke and other defenders of the new credits say Szoka’s comments don’t override the “plain meaning” of the language in the law, which says simply that the rates, “shall be nondiscriminatory and established only after an investigation of the costs and benefits of customer-sited generation.” 

“Legislative intent,” lawyers for Duke note dryly in one footnote in a legal filing, “is not derived from news articles from Energy News Network.”

The appellants also claim the commission erred by failing to consider all of the benefits of rooftop solar and by forcing solar owners to migrate to time-variable rates instead of allowing flat rates to stand.

The solution, they say in their brief: “The Court of Appeals should reverse the Commission’s… Order and remand this matter for a Commission-led investigation of the costs and benefits for [net metered] solar.”

A dogged Duke foe, NC WARN and its partners aren’t just trying to prevail on an obscure technical point of process. Examinations of distributed solar in other states have shown a clear trend: when utilities conduct the analyses, the benefits of rooftop solar come in lower than when commissions or independent groups are in charge.

Indeed, both Duke and Public Staff, the state-sanctioned customer advocate which sided against the appeal, maintained in court Wednesday that rooftop solar unfairly burdens non-solar customers and the company itself, a point few clean energy advocates or solar industry representatives concede.

Duke also isn’t alone among investor-owned utilities in its years-long quest to lower the one-to-one net metering credit rooftop solar owners have long enjoyed. After all, the fewer electrons the company sells at a markup, the lower its profits.

But Duke has also found compromise with at least some of its critics in ways many of its peers have not, helping to explain why it was groups like NC WARN —  and not the rooftop industry itself — that appeared formally in court on Wednesday.

The crux of the grand bargain is a move toward “time of use” rates, in which diligent solar owners can conceivably squeeze out the same benefits they enjoyed under the old rates, so long as they time their energy use to account for peak demand hours. 

A “bridge rate,” negotiated by long-time installers Southern Energy Management, Sundance Power Systems, and Yes Solar will be available for new customers until 2027, and many in the industry say it’s preferred for its simplicity and its relative low risk.

A final piece of the deal was greenlit last month: financial incentives for home batteries paired with rooftop solar, part of a pilot program to be rolled out in May called PowerPair.

While many veteran installers acknowledged fewer customer inquiries last year after the new rates took effect, they also suggested the harder-to-negotiate terms could weed out “bad actors” in the industry

And all say they’re focused long term on maximizing their key business advantage: Fossil fuels are becoming more expensive, while the materials designed to harness and store forever-free sunlight are getting cheaper.

Still, Bryce Bruncati, director of residential sales at 8M Solar and one of the industry’s most outspoken critics of the time-of-use rates, hopes the lawsuit argued today will lay the groundwork for a better long-term solution for installers.

“We’ve got these interim patches,” he told Energy News Network, referring to the bridge rate and the Power Pair program. “But starting in 2027, we’re going to see this massive contraction of the solar industry —  and fewer people going solar in general — if we don’t do something.”

There’s no firm deadline for the judges who heard Wednesday’s argument to issue a decision, but many observers were expecting an outcome within 90 days.

“}]] 

The post North Carolina court hears challenge to Duke Energy’s reduced credits for rooftop solar appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

North Carolina court hears challenge to Duke Energy’s reduced credits for rooftop solar

Energy News Beat

​[[{“value”:”

The debate over rooftop solar in North Carolina entered the courtroom on Wednesday, when a three-judge Court of Appeals panel heard a challenge to Duke Energy’s reduced payments for home solar arrays.

“We are here this morning because a terrible injury has been inflicted on the rooftop solar industry in our state,” said Matthew Quinn, the lawyer for seven climate justice groups appealing the rates approved last year by the Utilities Commission.

The lowered credits are part of a complicated truce between Duke, some of the state’s oldest rooftop installers, and multiple clean energy groups, all of whom sought to avoid the bruising battles over net metering seen in other states.

But the new payments have undoubtedly tamped interest in homes going solar since they took effect last fall, with one installer reporting residential sales falling by as much as 50%. 

Since the entities who compromised with Duke don’t represent all of those who engaged in the commission’s net metering docket, their agreement should be given “little to no weight,” the challengers, including NC WARN and Environmental Working Group, say in their legal appeal.

What’s more, they argue, the new rates are illegal because they were promulgated after internal Duke studies and stakeholder discussions regarding rooftop solar — not the independent investigation they believe is required by law.

“A 2017 state law mandates the Utilities Commission conduct its own solar net metering cost-benefit analysis,” said Jim Warren, the executive director of NC WARN, in a note to reporters before the oral arguments. “The commission flouted the law, choosing instead to lean on Duke Energy’s deeply flawed and one-sided calculations.”

The reasoning rests in part on an Energy News Network article that quotes one of the 2017 law’s authors, John Szoka, a Fayetteville Republican who served in the state House of Representatives for a decade. The story describes Szoka as “adamant” that the commission should conduct the study. 

“It’s not up to the utility to determine whether net metering is good or bad,” Szoka told the Energy News Network at the time. “We know what that answer will be. We’re not putting the fox in charge of the hen house here. That is not the intent.”

After quoting the piece in their brief, the plaintiffs write: “Clearly, the General Assembly did not intend for [Duke] to satisfy [the law] by performing an internal study. Indeed, such a study would be akin to ‘the fox in charge of the hen house.’”

Duke and other defenders of the new credits say Szoka’s comments don’t override the “plain meaning” of the language in the law, which says simply that the rates, “shall be nondiscriminatory and established only after an investigation of the costs and benefits of customer-sited generation.” 

“Legislative intent,” lawyers for Duke note dryly in one footnote in a legal filing, “is not derived from news articles from Energy News Network.”

The appellants also claim the commission erred by failing to consider all of the benefits of rooftop solar and by forcing solar owners to migrate to time-variable rates instead of allowing flat rates to stand.

The solution, they say in their brief: “The Court of Appeals should reverse the Commission’s… Order and remand this matter for a Commission-led investigation of the costs and benefits for [net metered] solar.”

A dogged Duke foe, NC WARN and its partners aren’t just trying to prevail on an obscure technical point of process. Examinations of distributed solar in other states have shown a clear trend: when utilities conduct the analyses, the benefits of rooftop solar come in lower than when commissions or independent groups are in charge.

Indeed, both Duke and Public Staff, the state-sanctioned customer advocate which sided against the appeal, maintained in court Wednesday that rooftop solar unfairly burdens non-solar customers and the company itself, a point few clean energy advocates or solar industry representatives concede.

Duke also isn’t alone among investor-owned utilities in its years-long quest to lower the one-to-one net metering credit rooftop solar owners have long enjoyed. After all, the fewer electrons the company sells at a markup, the lower its profits.

But Duke has also found compromise with at least some of its critics in ways many of its peers have not, helping to explain why it was groups like NC WARN —  and not the rooftop industry itself — that appeared formally in court on Wednesday.

The crux of the grand bargain is a move toward “time of use” rates, in which diligent solar owners can conceivably squeeze out the same benefits they enjoyed under the old rates, so long as they time their energy use to account for peak demand hours. 

A “bridge rate,” negotiated by long-time installers Southern Energy Management, Sundance Power Systems, and Yes Solar will be available for new customers until 2027, and many in the industry say it’s preferred for its simplicity and its relative low risk.

A final piece of the deal was greenlit last month: financial incentives for home batteries paired with rooftop solar, part of a pilot program to be rolled out in May called PowerPair.

While many veteran installers acknowledged fewer customer inquiries last year after the new rates took effect, they also suggested the harder-to-negotiate terms could weed out “bad actors” in the industry

And all say they’re focused long term on maximizing their key business advantage: Fossil fuels are becoming more expensive, while the materials designed to harness and store forever-free sunlight are getting cheaper.

Still, Bryce Bruncati, director of residential sales at 8M Solar and one of the industry’s most outspoken critics of the time-of-use rates, hopes the lawsuit argued today will lay the groundwork for a better long-term solution for installers.

“We’ve got these interim patches,” he told Energy News Network, referring to the bridge rate and the Power Pair program. “But starting in 2027, we’re going to see this massive contraction of the solar industry —  and fewer people going solar in general — if we don’t do something.”

There’s no firm deadline for the judges who heard Wednesday’s argument to issue a decision, but many observers were expecting an outcome within 90 days.

“}]] 

The post North Carolina court hears challenge to Duke Energy’s reduced credits for rooftop solar appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

Daily Energy Standup Episode #304 – Lower Earnings, Record Consumption, and Geopolitical Shifts

Energy News Beat

Daily Standup Top Stories

TotalEnergies reports lower LNG earnings, sales

France’s TotalEnergies said on Wednesday that the company’s integrated LNG business logged a decline in its adjusted net operating income in the fourth quarter of 2023 due to lower prices. The company’s integrated LNG adjusted […]

The True Costs Of Net-Zero Are Becoming Impossible To Hide

Britain Boiler Tax Scandal In the latest green fiasco, UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak created a quota system that would require manufacturers to sell more heat pumps to households. Instead of meekly complying with the […]

U.S. natural gas consumption established a new daily record in January 2024

Data source: S&P Global Commodity Insights On January 16, 2024, a record high of 141.5 billion cubic feet (Bcf) of natural gas was consumed in the U.S. Lower 48 states (L48), exceeding the previous record set […]

Analyzing The Mediterranean Corridor’s Provisionally Planned Extension To Lvov

The case can be made that the Mediterranean Corridor’s provisionally planned extension to Lvov is a pilot project that doesn’t presage the bloc’s intent to prepare for relocating the Ukrainian capital to there like Medvedev […]

Oil Market Needs $14 Trillion: OPEC Secretary General

The global oil market will require $14 trillion in investments over the next 20 years if oil-producing nations hope to be able to fulfill global energy demands through 2045, OPEC’s Secretary General Haitham al-Ghais said […]

Highlights of the Podcast

00:00 – Intro
01:44 – TotalEnergies reports lower LNG earnings, sales
03:36 – The True Costs Of Net-Zero Are Becoming Impossible To Hide
08:13 – U.S. natural gas consumption established a new daily record in January 2024
09:22 – Analyzing The Mediterranean Corridor’s Provisionally Planned Extension To Lvov
11:35 – Oil Market Needs $14 Trillion: OPEC Secretary General
15:44 – Markets Update
19:58 – Outro

Follow Stuart On LinkedIn and Twitter

Follow Michael On LinkedIn and Twitter

ENB Top News

ENB

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– Get in Contact With The Show –

Video Transcription edited for grammar. We disavow any errors unless they make us look better or smarter.

Michael Tanner: [00:00:14] What’s going on, everybody? Welcome in to the Thursday, February 8th, 2024 edition of the Daily Energy News Beat standup. Here are today’s top headlines. First up, TotalEnergies reports lower LNG earnings and sales. Interesting one there. Next up, oil market needs $14 trillion according to the OPEC secretary general. Absolutely unbelievable. Next up, the true cost of net zero are becoming impossible to hide. Then we’ll go to analyzing the Mediterranean corridor. Provisionally planned extension to move. This is you know, we love a good Club Med story. We know that for a fact. Oh, and we’ll finish up with U.S. natural gas consumption. Establish a new daily record in January 2024. We talked about a little bit that last night on The Daily Show. Excited to do that here. Then we will switch over, cover quickly. What’s going on in the oil and gas finance markets? We’ve got oil prices currently sitting. And you know we’re we’re here live at Nape. So I’m doing everything on my phone here. But oil is trading about 7384 right now. Brant oil about $79. And then the only other thing I saw in the market today was we saw a merger. CRC California Resources Corporation is going to acquire Aera Energy in an all stock transaction valued at about $1.2 billion. On an interesting note, when we get into about who some of the beneficiaries of that is. So we’ll cover all that in the bag of chips, guys. But for Michael Tanner, Stuart Turley, we’re here live at nay. Good to see you in person again. And let’s fire this off. [00:01:41][86.4]

Stuart Turley: [00:01:42] Hey let’s get ready to rumble here. Total energy is Michael, as we normally call them. Reports lower LNG earnings and sales. And here’s a little bit why on that, Michael, they said Wednesday that the company’s integrated LNG business logged a decline in its adjusted net operating income due to lower prices. So it means their volumes was the same now, compared to the 134 billion in the previous quarter, their net income rose 8%, reflecting the evolutionary crisis. So what has happened was a couple things that are not listed in this article is the lesser amount of natural gas being demanded in Europe because of the killing of the, industries, IT industry, manufacturing, because of low cost energy has been shut down. It’s having a flattening effect on LNG. Yeah. Oh yeah. Second order of magnitude. [00:02:49][66.9]

Michael Tanner: [00:02:49] Again is what we like to talk about. You know, I mean you give you guys an idea. You know in Europe you’re still we’re still trading at over $14 per MMBtu, which is unbelievable. And what what this article points out is that a that’s a decline of over 31%. I mean, if we were getting those net backs here, everybody be drilling natural gas. We’re sitting in here at the place A deals. You’d see no oil. You’d see only gas prospects. [00:03:13][23.7]

Stuart Turley: [00:03:14] Oh yeah. At $2. You’re not really getting real high on that. Now, here’s the problem, Michael, is those tankers are not cheap. Those tankers, not at all. And then you got a home owner, and there are record orders for tankers around the world. Asia is going nuts for LNG. Yeah. So, anyway, I, I thought this was a great article. Let’s roll to the next one here, Michael. The true cost and here we go. It is. The true cost of net zero are becoming impossible to hide. You know, it is becoming impossible to hide because the data is now surfacing. They have been hiding the data, Michael, for so long that they’re even manipulating the data in the, article on that. It’s now the hottest summer, hottest year in history. Well, it’s because they’ve manipulated the data in order to do it, and it’s kind of cool finding out how they’re doing it. Now. Britain dumps another net zero. Gimmick. The Wall Street, reports this, they use natural gas to fuel the cabinet size broilers to provide central heating and hot water, forcing them to not electric heat pumps. Electric heat pumps don’t work nearly as efficiently in the U.S.. The British thermal kind of ironic British thermal, that, it does not work nearly as high because you have, either coal or wind and solar and it does not work. So anyway, I thought that was pretty funny. The Windex, I thought this was another one. The Biden win tax. The U.S. manufacturers have yet to stand up to. I’m not going to use the word. All right. Idiotic regulations. This is a quote out of the article. This it? Yeah, yeah, yeah, just hey, Google, this is a quote out of the article. So Biden’s games are unraveling and. And Bloomberg reports a 48% surge in cost. The Rex is much needed. Wind farm power plans 48% cost on that. And so. Oh, hey, everybody, for our folks, watching out there, we have the RT Trevino. We do. He’s the big dog over there at Peco’s Operating. And we love you, Artie. Thanks. Thanks for stopping by, baby. [00:05:41][147.7]

Michael Tanner: [00:05:42] Absolutely. All right. [00:05:43][1.2]

Stuart Turley: [00:05:44] Well, and again, the wind farms are even being canceled in new Jersey. And I think it’s a great thing because they’re killing all the right whales up there, and. [00:05:52][8.4]

Michael Tanner: [00:05:53] Well, it’s going to come back to the East coast. Continues to shoot themselves in the foot. [00:05:58][4.7]

Stuart Turley: [00:05:59] I think a little higher than that. [00:06:00][0.9]

Michael Tanner: [00:06:00] And they’re going to end up like we all. We keep saying they’re going back on Russian crew. Don’t you worry. They will end up on Russian crude. [00:06:07][6.6]

Stuart Turley: [00:06:07] Right? I’m going to have something on that here in just a minute. And I think I might as well just give my $0.02 here. Watch what happens shortly on Tucker Carlson. Tucker Carlson is going to be in. He’s already interviewed Putin. So, you know, hey, we were teasing about this. You know, a my Putin imitation. And when when Tucker Carlson releases that, there is going to be a huge backlash. They’re already trying to ban. I believe you just said that they’re trying to. [00:06:40][32.5]

Michael Tanner: [00:06:41] But yet the EU is putting a travel ban on him on Tucker Carlson. [00:06:44][3.6]

Stuart Turley: [00:06:45] Yeah, it’s because it’s. [00:06:46][0.9]

Michael Tanner: [00:06:46] One that you’ve got. [00:06:46][0.5]

Stuart Turley: [00:06:47] Right? I don’t blame them because, you know, I’m I’m going to go up to Schwab. You know, Charles Schwab and say, hey, dude, you’re a nut. Now, here’s the thing. What you’re going to find out is, I think that Tucker Carlson is going to go ahead and expose that there was a deal. There was a cease fire between Ukraine and Russia. The Biden administration and the EU. And it. [00:07:15][28.3]

Michael Tanner: [00:07:15] Yep. They sent Boris Johnson down there to blow the deal up. [00:07:18][2.8]

Stuart Turley: [00:07:18] Exactly. Now, here’s what’s going to happen. I think that people are going to say Putin’s a bad guy, but he’s not that bad guy. And so energy makes a difference. And I think you’re going to see an opening up within six months of people buying, Russian, say, and that’s not talked about. And I think you heard it here first, Michael. And I’ve got a few other things I’m working on to back that number up with. So anyway, let’s go to the natural gas consumption, establish a new daily record in, in, the US. This is from our buddies over there at the EIA. I think they finally got something right. It’s got to be a, election year. They needed some, some wins. What do you think? [00:08:04][45.6]

Michael Tanner: [00:08:05] No. They do. And and we touched on this a little bit on yesterday’s show, specifically, with their short term energy outlook, but really baked into those numbers as you show here was an absolute crushing, the natural gas consumption record, the the the largest. I’m trying to find it right here in, you know, on January 16th, 2024, a record high of 141 point 5,000,000,000 cubic feet of natural gas was consumed. And that’s on a per day basis. [00:08:32][26.7]

Stuart Turley: [00:08:33] Right? [00:08:33][0.0]

Michael Tanner: [00:08:33] That’s one day per day. [00:08:35][1.7]

Stuart Turley: [00:08:36] And we’re still down at $2, Mark. [00:08:37][1.7]

Michael Tanner: [00:08:38] You know, it’s pretty pretty crazy. [00:08:39][0.9]

Stuart Turley: [00:08:39] I don’t get it. [00:08:40][0.6]

Michael Tanner: [00:08:40] Well, because you also have to notice that we were we started as we talked a little bit about yesterday, we were about 13% above the five year natural gas storage average. So right as we begin to move below that, five, you know what a five week rolling average or five year, I think it’s a five year rolling average, right? You’re going to see prices, hopefully not settle out a little bit. But I mean, if we look right now, I mean, I mean, we’re we’re $2.96 right now for spot price on natural gas. And you know those net backs you know the WA has got can’t be much better. Yeah. [00:09:12][32.1]

Stuart Turley: [00:09:13] I had a joke, but HR does not want me to jump in. Yeah, sure. Yeah. Ixnay on the joke. Okay, let’s go to the next one. Analyzing the Mediterranean corridor is provisionally planned. Extension to Elba. Oh. Now, Michael, if we could have the, Mister producer, if you could bring up the map. That map really shows a corridor of pipelines and natural gas coming out of Russia and going through the Ukraine. And here’s where this story is going to end up. And that goes back to my Tucker Carlson story that it is, going to gain precedence again because the war in Ukraine is going to end very soon. Zelensky’s toast. He’s going to be the fall guy for this. But if you can take a look at this map, you can see that net Russian natural gas going right on through down to the Strait of Gibraltar. You know that. That is an absolute gigantic swath through swath. That’s how we say that in Oklahoma. That’s a swath all the way through there of low cost energy. And and so let’s go through some of these numbers here. And it goes through the deputy chair of the Russian Security Council, Dmitri Medvedev, drew global attention to the Mediterranean’s corridor, provisionally planned extension to LV Ovie on his tweet. Let’s see what it says here. It says the point here is that it’s not tracks in the West and, they differ with it’s that the business is a lot more, president than politicians. People want business. They want low cost food and the the farmers all across the EU. My hat’s off to you guys. We love the farmers. No farmers, no food. And I applaud you guys, man. Have you seen the stuff they’re throwing? [00:11:19][125.6]

Michael Tanner: [00:11:20] Yeah, they’re going crazy. It’s happening. But the hard part is it’s actually tough to find. You can’t Google it. You got to go. You got to go to new source like Energy News beat.com to find out about this stuff. It’s crazy. [00:11:31][11.1]

Stuart Turley: [00:11:31] It is absolutely nuts. And so let’s go to our last story here. Oil market needs 14 trillion OPEC secretary general. I trust OPEC more than the IEA. the IEA is much like the EIA and not old MacDonald’s farm. They had an E-i-e-i-o. I think okay, global market will require 14 trillion investments over the next 20 years. If oil producing nations hope to be able to fulfill global energy demands through 40, 45, that is really critical, Michael, for a couple reasons. You don’t have to print money in order to get those trillions because there is a return on investment. Now the side effect of this is Blackrock and all of the other ESG funds have now started funding oil and gas. And now they’re also allowing to fund coal. They realize around the world it’s okay to have a transition. And the transition may require a few more years or decades. People are tired. Political people lose their jobs when people don’t have low cost energy. [00:12:52][81.1]

Michael Tanner: [00:12:53] Michael. No, absolutely. I mean, I think it’s there’s some interesting notes in this article here. They say India’s oil demand is expected to double by 2045, up from 19 million barrels per day to over 38 million barrels per day. And that’s according to Prime Minister Modi. He said, based on this in India is going to be consistently growing its energy. We aim to increase our share of natural gas to 15% of primary energy consumption, up from 6% today. And by 2030, Modi mentions that refining capacity will be up to 100 or 450 Mtpa, which is a big number. [00:13:30][37.1]

Stuart Turley: [00:13:30] You hit a big, big point. Iran and Iraq are now selling huge amounts of oil. Russia is still selling huge amounts of oil. I believe the number of their increased capacity is I’m going to throw a number at a million barrels per day. Okay. Yes. What’s happening? It’s the Russia oil and the Iraq oil’s coming to India. It’s being refined and going back to Europe as diesel because Europe has hosed it down. So India is smart because their profits that they make, you’ll pay for lower energy costs for Indian. I think it’s phenomenal for them. It’s showing the West their hypocrisy that they have is actually costing the West consumers more. Go figure that one out. [00:14:23][52.5]

Michael Tanner: [00:14:23] Well it’s as always the consumer’s going to take it in the drive through. But as we agree when OPEC comes out with forecasts we listen. When the IEA comes out with forecasts we go let’s go. [00:14:35][12.3]

Stuart Turley: [00:14:35] Fact check. [00:14:36][0.2]

Michael Tanner: [00:14:36] Yeah absolutely. [00:14:37][0.6]

Stuart Turley: [00:14:38] Do you think that they would ever get banned on Twitter OPEC. [00:14:40][2.7]

Michael Tanner: [00:14:41] Yeah. No Hamas is still on Twitter. [00:14:44][2.6]

Stuart Turley: [00:14:44] So wow. Yeah. Wow. okay I’m done. I got nothing on that one. All right. [00:14:53][9.0]

Michael Tanner: [00:14:53] We’ll go ahead and and flip over to finance. Before we do that guys. We’ll go ahead and pay the bills here. As always, the show is sponsored by the world’s greatest website, EnergyNewsBeat.com The best place for all of your energy and oil and gas news. Steering the team do an outstanding job of making sure that website stays up to speed with everything you need to know to be the tip of. The spear when it comes to the energy business. You can check out the description below in the Five Guys to all the links to the podcast. All of the different, news sources that we went over here. You can find them, read them, skip ad, do all the timestamps, everything you need, email the show [email protected]. Check out our data news combo product dashboard.energynewsbeat.com. The best place for all your data. News combo. Really pushing that hard energy to a lot of cool stuff coming around the corner guys. So just check us out again. www.energynewsbeat.com. Well your record is about 145 so yeah you markets are still open right now. We’ve seen crude oil run a little bit. It’s up to 7383. Main reason for that just mainly has to do with with with what we saw the EIA come out and drop today. And let me go ahead and just pull this up. We did see a larger than average U.S fuel star drop. drop. Remember we were supposed to see about a 500,000 barrel drop according to the EIA. What we went ahead and saw was a 31., or, excuse me, crude oil reserves, were drawn down by 5.5 million barrels. So again the estimate yesterday 500,000 barrel draw. We now see today 5.5 million. And that only brought prices up to $73. We only seen about a percent rise on that. We did see a larger than average U.S gasoline stock pull at about 3.15 million barrels. Compared with analysts estimates about 140,000 barrels, according to our favorite people over at the EIA, distillates fell by 3.2 million barrels compared to the estimate of 1 billion barrels. That’s really what’s happening as we’re talking about prices being buried, we did see. But finally, utilization shrink point a half a percentage point to 8242. And we’re still seeing some of the effects of that deep freeze that happened about two weeks ago, U.S Gulf Coast. We saw about 15% of its refining capacity still be, offline, which is really, bringing down, utilization rates to the lowest level since September 2021. Really during the middle of Covid right there. You know, the only about the only other thing I saw that was really interesting was we did see a, merger this morning, Aera Energy and, Aera Energy goes ahead and gets acquired by CRC resources for a valuation of about $2.1 billion. And one thing I just find interesting, I guess before I get into that, both these companies are California operators, and we’ve talked here on the show at nauseam about how it’s becoming extremely hard to do business in. Yeah, in California, we saw Chevron in their earnings report write down the value of their earnings assets, by over about $5 billion from a write down due to their California stuff. But CRC California resources, the two of the big players out there, it’s an all stock transition. What’s funny is one of the biggest investors and, you know, era energy is, is, is is owned by two specific companies. I cave, which is a large international private equity company, and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Fund, owning a cool 49% of that. So interesting. What’s also interesting is that they took stock. They didn’t take cash. Now this stock gives them more liquidity because you can you you know, you can use that stock as collateral and carrying out loans against it. But it’s interesting that they didn’t go for an all star. They didn’t look for a deal specifically with cash. You know, considering what the Trudeau administration is attempting to do there, which is divest of everything from oil and gas. So it’s clear the Canada pension, but they’re still all for oil and gas. [00:18:43][229.8]

Stuart Turley: [00:18:44] Oh, yeah. They like money. [00:18:45][1.3]

Michael Tanner: [00:18:46] Exactly. [00:18:46][0.0]

Stuart Turley: [00:18:47] You want to survive? Wasn’t that the Terminator? If you want to leave, you come with me. [00:18:52][5.0]

Michael Tanner: [00:18:52] Yep. Okay. Absolutely. To give you guys an idea. Now, that’s the iccv. They’ve ICDs doing about, 31 billion of net assets. So they’re becoming they’re the 51% owner there. I think the other thing that was interesting to see is here’s the here’s, Bill Rogers, he’s the managing director and global head of sustainable energy. He went he goes ahead and says this, this transaction provides needs to be investments, an excellent opportunity to scale up our investment in California’s energy transition with Eren Energy and CRC, both lean and continue to enable new carbon management solutions, each bringing complementary strengths to the table. So they’ve got to obviously come out and say, no, no, no, no, no, we did this for renewable energy reasons. But let’s be very clear here. It’s high oil and gas is going to continue to rule the day there. [00:19:35][42.3]

Stuart Turley: [00:19:35] Yes. You gotta make money to spend money. [00:19:37][2.2]

Michael Tanner: [00:19:38] Absolutely. All right. Well we’re live here at Nape. It’s about 145. We’ve had an excellent day here on when we’re recording this Wednesday here. You guys are listening to this on Thursday. We’re getting there. We’re gearing up. We got to be ready to go tomorrow. It’s going to be a busy day. [00:19:49][11.1]

Stuart Turley: [00:19:49] Oh huge day. We’ve still got lots of people to interview today and it is nutty out there today. Stay safe. We’ll see you next time. [00:19:57][8.0]

Michael Tanner: [00:19:57] Yeah, absolutely. Anything else people should be concerned about. [00:20:00][2.3]

Stuart Turley: [00:20:01] Watch Tucker’s interview dropping off. And, because the second order of magnitude effects of that single interview. Third and the fourth and the third and the fourth, the Biden. Administration is trying to shut it down. The EU is already trying to shut it down. And what you’re going to hear out of that is that you’re going to see an end. Tucker. And my opinion is going to be able to end the war, because people are going to realize that. Putin I’m not going to say if he’s a good guy or not. He’s not as bad as he was because of the child trafficking that is becoming documented. The 30 plus weapons labs that the US had in Ukraine. Ukraine is a crime sim and I’m glad it’s finally coming to light. [00:20:52][51.2]

Michael Tanner: [00:20:52] Yeah. No. [00:20:53][0.3]

Stuart Turley: [00:20:53] Let’s end that, crime scene. [00:20:56][2.9]

Michael Tanner: [00:20:57] Yeah. No, it’s going to be very interesting to see what Tucker comes out of. That’s kind of the talk of the town right now. But with that, guys, we appreciate you checking us out. Have a great week. You will see our weekly recap drop on Friday. Or excuse me, we got interviews drop in Friday. Weekly hit caps coming on Saturday right. [00:21:10][13.8]

Stuart Turley: [00:21:11] We have lots of interviews. [00:21:12][1.0]

Michael Tanner: [00:21:12] You guys are about to be inundated with interviews, so get ready for all the people. We saw George Bush this morning who’s running for Texas Attorney general? We we talked with the TCU energy, administrators. Right. We’ve got just a host of other subjects. [00:21:24][11.7]

Stuart Turley: [00:21:25] And regions coming up. And then. Yeah, I mean, he is one cool cat. [00:21:29][3.8]

Michael Tanner: [00:21:29] Absolutely. Car Ingram everybody was here. So it’s going to be awesome. But with that guys we’ll let you go for Stuart Turley I’m Michael Tanner. We’ll see you next week guys. [00:21:29][0.0][1245.9]

– Get in Contact With The Show –

The post Daily Energy Standup Episode #304 – Lower Earnings, Record Consumption, and Geopolitical Shifts appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

ENB #183 Elevating Humanity: A Conversation on Ending Energy Poverty with NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman of the African Energy Chamber

Energy News Beat

Energy poverty is real. But it can be cured. Sit back and enjoy a conversation with one of the world’s leading experts in ending energy poverty. NJ Ayuk is the executive chairman of the African Energy Chamber, and he is a phenomenal author and industry-leading expert on a mission to eliminate energy poverty.

I had an absolute blast, and Cyrus Brooks, RBAC, was on the panel. His passion and energy experience is phenomenal. NJ, Cyrus, and I covered the key issues in Africa but only scratched the surface of some of the solutions.

The West has not always had Africa’s best interest at heart, and it is time for Africa to put Africa first. If done correctly, the West could have great new markets for goods and services. Africa could get the manufacturing and technical knowledge transfer while shipping completed goods rather than just raw materials.

 

Check out NJ’s book A Just Transition: Making Energy Poverty History with an Energy Mix. It is a fantastic book about his mission leading the African Energy Chamber.

Thank you, NJ and Cyrus, for your time and industry leadership. I am looking forward to our future conversations about the problems and solutions of ending energy poverty.

Follow and connect with NJ on his LinkedIn HERE: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nj-ayuk-jd-mba-6658662/

Follow up with Cyrus on his LinkedIn HERE: https://www.linkedin.com/in/cyrus-brooks-03274713/

Energy News Beat Podcasts: https://energynewsbeat.co/industry-insights-2/

Highlights of the Podcast

02:25 – The whole idea behind the energy industry

04:07 – Energy poverty

08:02 – The geopolitical problems with the Red Sea

08:27 – The love for free markets

12:09 – African oil and gas producers should seek to maximize their own capacities

13:06 – Where they refine their crude oil

14:22 – The power of natural gas

20:53 – One of the biggest acquisitions that happened in t

The post ENB #183 Elevating Humanity: A Conversation on Ending Energy Poverty with NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman of the African Energy Chamber appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

Analyzing The Mediterranean Corridor’s Provisionally Planned Extension To Lvov

Energy News Beat

The case can be made that the Mediterranean Corridor’s provisionally planned extension to Lvov is a pilot project that doesn’t presage the bloc’s intent to prepare for relocating the Ukrainian capital to there like Medvedev predicted on Twitter.

Deputy Chair of the Russian Security Council Dmitry Medvedev drew global attention to the Mediterranean Corridor’s provisionally planned extension to Lvov in his tweet on Monday, which speculated that this will presage the creation of a rump Ukraine with its capital in that western city. The EU reportedly agreed to finance this rail project up until that city instead of to Kiev, including through the construction of European-compataible gauge tracks, thus giving rise to rumors of their intent.

Medvedev wryly concluded his tweet by writing that “the point here is not that the tracks in the West and Malorossiya differ in width. It’s just that business is a lot more prescient than politicians”, but the argument can just as plausibly be made that business is also more averse to political risks. It might not be that they don’t expect Kiev to remain the capital of Ukraine, which former Pentagon official Stephen Bryen reported last month could be moved to Lvov, but that this expansion is simply a pilot project.

To explain, while that corridor would nevertheless complement Lvov’s political role in the abovementioned scenario, it could very well be that Brussels feels more comfortable seeing how quickly it could be built and how profitable it’ll be for everyone before committing to extending it to Kiev. After all, it’s already unprecedented enough that the EU reportedly reached a provisional agreement to finance this route’s extension into a non-member state, so it makes sense that they’d play it cautiously.

Ukraine is still a warzone too and a lot of the bombing that Russia has carried out against military targets over this time has been in the regions east of the erstwhile Austrian-Hungarian Empire’s former lands. Committing a massive amount of funds for building a railway closer towards the areas that have been directly affected by this ongoing conflict, especially the capital itself, could rightly be criticized by some European Parliamentarians as a reckless gamble that risks wasting resources on a “white elephant”.

Proceeding cautiously by approving a pilot project for extending this corridor to Lvov, however, could reduce resistance to this initiative and possibly prove its viability, some years after which it could then be extended to Kiev once the conflict inevitably ends. The intent is almost certainly not what Medvedev assessed it to be even if it ultimately serves that role in the scenario that Bryen reported since the North Sea-Baltic Corridor would have been prioritized over the Mediterranean one in that case.

This project connects the Low Countries with Germany, Poland, and the Baltics, and the summer 2022 proposal for extending it into Ukraine could have been approved instead if the bloc envisaged it playing the aforesaid role in a much smaller rump state than the one at present. As a case in point, Poland is already slyly taking control of Western Ukraine through economic means, and the return of German-backed Donald Tusk to the premiership could see Ukraine’s wealth siphoned to Berlin via Warsaw.

Poland just subordinated itself to German hegemony by agreeing to the partial implementation of the “miliary Schengen” for optimizing the movement of troops and equipment between those two and the Netherlands in what’ll be the first time since World War II that Germany has been able to do so. One-third of a year ago, Poland’s former government also accused Germany of cutting a deal with Ukraine behind its back, so the stage is set for Germany to expand its economic influence there.

Prior to the recent report about the EU’s provisional agreement to fund the Mediterranean Corridor’s extension to Lvov, one could have therefore predicted that they’d fund the North Sea-Baltic one’s instead, but that didn’t happen despite it making the most sense for the bloc’s de facto German leader. It’s unclear what accounts for this inexplicable decision, but it nevertheless serves as a powerful counterpoint to Medvedev’s assessment of the EU’s grand strategic intentions in this case.

Putting everything the together, the case can thus compellingly be made that the Mediterranean Corridor’s provisionally planned extension to Lvov is a pilot project that doesn’t presage the bloc’s intent to prepare for relocating the Ukrainian capital to there, even though this scenario could still transpire. Medvedev’s take wasn’t wrong per se since there’s a cogent logic behind what he wrote, but considering the facts that were shared in this piece, it appears to be more akin to wishful thinking than anything else.

Source: Korybko.substack.com

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The post Analyzing The Mediterranean Corridor’s Provisionally Planned Extension To Lvov appeared first on Energy News Beat.